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That more OAPs are extremists and the youth are likely to vote green is hardly news. But people trying to turn that into a case of the old disenfranchising the young are way off base - for every idealistic young voter there are tons more who simply don't vote because they have no clue about politics. A lot of that is just trying to be too cool for school, but a lot is down to the fact we don't appear to teach kids this stuff in school.

 

The lack of any discernable age difference in Tory/Labour from youth to retirement appears more significant - Ed was after all banging on about how it's the young who are being screwed by the Tory home owning voters yanking up the ladder. It would appear that was just one of his many faulty campaign strategies that was based on appealing to the core vote rather than the swingers (if you assume Tories are pro-self and Labour voters are pro-society).

Edited by Mako
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That's an odd article. It posts the working classes have been deserting Labour since before Blair, yet it doesn't say where they went. It seems to be suggesting some, esp. skilled, have gone over to the Tories, therefore its conclusion seems all wrong.

 

It did end up with me finding this though:

 

http://www.spectator.co.uk/features/9528312/inside-the-milibunker-the-last-days-of-ed-did-ed-miliband-sacrifice-ed-balls/

 

It sounds like Ed's campaign was every bit the disaster I thought it was. By all accounts one of their own press officers nearly had a breakdown when he saw the infamous stone tablet.

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Boris Johnson's younger brother is the new Science and Universities minister. His career before politics? Banking and journalism. If Ed wasn't such a fuckwit, this would have been a perfect position for our very own Labour MP for Newcastle Central.

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Portillo said this last week, and I tend to agree now - while it may be the case that in society Shy Tories don't speak up, it doesn't really explain why they lie to pollsters, when that process is anonymous, afaik. Far more likely is combination of errors in the way the pollsters weigh their data, or their actual methods (biased towards online polls apparently), and a late swing in the undecideds and maybe even Labour voters. The exit poll was spot on, even though that's also anonymous (they literally give people a ballot paper and tell them to mark it how they voted it and put in a ballot box).

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tories are shy because it's no one wants to own up to being one in public, mainly because it means openly admitting you care more about yourself than anyone else. only a weapons grade douche like CT would be proud to admit as much.

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Portillo said this last week, and I tend to agree now - while it may be the case that in society Shy Tories don't speak up, it doesn't really explain why they lie to pollsters, when that process is anonymous, afaik. Far more likely is combination of errors in the way the pollsters weigh their data, or their actual methods (biased towards online polls apparently), and a late swing in the undecideds and maybe even Labour voters. The exit poll was spot on, even though that's also anonymous (they literally give people a ballot paper and tell them to mark it how they voted it and put in a ballot box).

The pre-election polls only take into account people expressing a preference I believe. Whereas the exit polls ask people who've just voted. The fairly obvious conclusion is that floating voters / undecided tended to vote Tory this time.

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